Thursday, January 30, 2025

Washington DC officials believe there are no survivors after jet carrying 64 people collided with military helicopter – latest

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‘No survivors’ expected at crash site, with 27 bodies recovered from plane and 1 from helicopter

DC fire and EMS chief John A Donnelly speaks next. He said the crash alert was sounded at 8.48pm last night.

First responders found, he said, “extremely frigid conditions. They found heavy wind. They found ice on the water, and they’ve operated all night in those conditions.”

He is thanking a lengthy list of various agencies and departments who came to assist the operation.

He says: “we don’t believe there are any survivors” and that 27 bodies have been recovered from the plane, and one from the helicopter.

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Key events

In a statement on X, Virginia senator Tim Kaine said that he was “heartbroken about the aviation disaster near DCA.”

He went to write that he is “continuing to pray for those impacted and for the first responders. I’m gathering more information from local officials, the FAA, and the Army and will be pushing for a thorough investigation into what happened.”

Here are some images coming through the newswires of recovery efforts that remain under way in the Potomac River:

Search and rescue efforts are seen around a wreckage site in the Potomac River from Ronald Reagan Washington National airport, early Thursday morning in Arlington, Virginia. Photograph: Mark Schiefelbein/AP
A view of the scene after a regional plane collided in midair with a military helicopter and crashed into the Potomac River in Washington, D.C. United States on January 30, 2025. Photograph: Anadolu/Getty Images
Medical officials conduct search and rescue operation on American Airlines plane in the water after it collided in midair with a military helicopter which killed at least 27 people and crashed into the Potomac River in Washington, D.C. United States on January 30, 2025. Photograph: Anadolu/Getty Images
Part of the wreckage is seen as rescue crews search the waters of the Potomac River after a passenger plane on approach to Reagan National Airport crashed into the river after colliding with a US Army helicopter, near Washington, DC, on January 30, 2025. Photograph: Andrew Caballero-Reynolds/AFP/Getty Images
A helicopter flies near the crash site of the American Airlines plane on the Potomac River after the plane crashed on approach to Reagan National Airport on January 30, 2025 in Arlington, Virginia. Photograph: Win McNamee/Getty Images
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Transportation secretary Sean Duffy says plane crash was ‘preventable’

Transportation secretary Sean Duffy said that the plane crash “was preventable.”

Speaking to reporters on Thursday morning, Duffy was asked whether he agreed with Donald Trump’s comments that the crash could have been prevented, to which Duffy responded:

“We’re going to wait for all the information to come in from this vantage point but to back up what the president said and what I’ve seen so far, do I think this was preventable? Absolutely.”

More than 30 bodies have been recovered so far after the American Airlines jet carrying 64 people – 60 passengers and 4 crew members – collided with a US army Black Hawk helicopter that was carrying 3 soldiers on Wednesday night in Washington DC.

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Sean Duffy makes another point, saying that people should not misinterpret that a US army helicopter on a “training flight” means these were pilots with little experience.

The press briefing group has been asked by a journalist, given that the plane was on a “standard” flight path, whether that path will be used again today when the airport reopens. Sean Duffy says: “I don’t have that information quite yet from the FAA, so I don’t want to provide information, or I don’t want to provide an answer or inaccurate information on what routes will be flown out of DC.”

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Sean Duffy, the transportation secretary, has said he doesn’t want to be drawn into speculation about causes of the crash, stressing that military helicopters use those flight paths every single day.

“Something went wrong here,” he says, adding: “I look forward to the time and point where we can give you that information, but I don’t want to comment on that right now.”

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DC fire chief says he is confident all bodies will be found

DC fire and EMS chief John A Donnelly says he is confident they will ultimately be able to recover all of the bodies from the crash.

He adds: “I’m confident that we will do that. It will take us a little bit of time. It may involve some more equipment.”

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Sean Duffy, the transportation secretary, has been asked if he can reassure travellers. He replies:

Can I guarantee the American flying public that the US has the most safe and secure airspace in the world? And the answer to that is absolutely yes, we do. We have early indicators of what happened here, and I will tell you with complete confidence, we have the safest airspace in the world.

It was noted earlier that this was the first commercial aircraft crash causing fatalities in the US since 2009.

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DC fire and EMS chief John A Donnelly has been asked what the challenges are with the operation at the moment. He said:

The recovery operation goes on. It’s a lot of touch and feel in the different parts of the plane and the helicopter, and the crash area is a little spread out. So we’ve got some work to do.

He says, with the wind, the debris field has spread down to the Wilson Bridge.

Washington DC mayor Muriel Bowser states that the National Transportation Safety Board will become the lead agency in the investigation, and she expects it will give a further briefing later today.

They are now taking questions from the media.

Reagan national airport to reopen at 11am local time

Metropolitan Washington airports authority CEO Jack Carter speaks next. He says Reagan national airport will reopen at 11am (4pm GMT).

He offers “thanks to the many, many who are still out there working very, very hard to complete this recovery”.

He says: “a lot of effort was brought to bear but unfortunately we weren’t able to rescue anyone.”

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Helpline set up for loved ones of victims

Amercian Airlines CEO Robert Eisen says: “At this time we don’t know why the military aircraft came into the path of the PSA aircraft.”

He urges friends and family of those affected to call 1-800-679-8215, which is the helpline the airline has set up.

He says: “I know that there are many questions at this early stage, I just won’t be able to answer many, but we’ll provide additional information as it comes.”

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Robert Eisen, the CEO of American Airlines, speaks next. He said the crash is “devastating” and adds: “We’re absolutely heartbroken for the family and loved ones of the passengers and crew members.”

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‘No survivors’ expected at crash site, with 27 bodies recovered from plane and 1 from helicopter

DC fire and EMS chief John A Donnelly speaks next. He said the crash alert was sounded at 8.48pm last night.

First responders found, he said, “extremely frigid conditions. They found heavy wind. They found ice on the water, and they’ve operated all night in those conditions.”

He is thanking a lengthy list of various agencies and departments who came to assist the operation.

He says: “we don’t believe there are any survivors” and that 27 bodies have been recovered from the plane, and one from the helicopter.

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Sean Duffy continues by saying “safety is our expectation. Everyone who flies in American skies expects that we fly safely.”

He says president Donald Trump and the respective authorities “will not rest until we have answers for the families, and for the flying public.”

Sean Duffy, US secretary of transportation, is speaking now. He praises state and federal authorities for working in unison. He says it was a clear night last night, and the helicopter was in a “standard flight pattern”. He says the aircraft coming into land was also on a standard flight path. He says both aircraft have been located. The plane was found inverted, in three sections, in waist-deep water.

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Muriel Bowser says there is “a profound sense of grief” after the crash, adding that families have been affected “from across our region, as well as in Kansas and across the country”.

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Washington DC mayor Muriel Bowser is beginning her update briefing at Reagan national airport.

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